Biosurfactant production and growth kinetics studies of the waste canola oil-degrading bacterium rhodococcus erythropolis AQ5-07 from Antarctica

With the progressive increase in human activities in the Antarctic region, the possibility of domestic oil spillage also increases. Developing means for the removal of oils, such as canola oil, from the environment and waste “grey” water using biological approaches is therefore desirable, since the...

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Published in:Molecules
Main Author: Ibrahim S.; Khalil K.A.; Zahri K.N.M.; Gomez-Fuentes C.; Convey P.; Zulkarnain A.; Sabri S.; Alias S.A.; González-Rocha G.; Ahmad S.A.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85090176519&doi=10.3390%2fmolecules25173878&partnerID=40&md5=19b526998e53d800335e795a02d733e0
id 2-s2.0-85090176519
spelling 2-s2.0-85090176519
Ibrahim S.; Khalil K.A.; Zahri K.N.M.; Gomez-Fuentes C.; Convey P.; Zulkarnain A.; Sabri S.; Alias S.A.; González-Rocha G.; Ahmad S.A.
Biosurfactant production and growth kinetics studies of the waste canola oil-degrading bacterium rhodococcus erythropolis AQ5-07 from Antarctica
2020
Molecules
25
17
10.3390/molecules25173878
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85090176519&doi=10.3390%2fmolecules25173878&partnerID=40&md5=19b526998e53d800335e795a02d733e0
With the progressive increase in human activities in the Antarctic region, the possibility of domestic oil spillage also increases. Developing means for the removal of oils, such as canola oil, from the environment and waste “grey” water using biological approaches is therefore desirable, since the thermal process of oil degradation is expensive and ineffective. Thus, in this study an indigenous cold-adapted Antarctic soil bacterium, Rhodococcus erythropolis strain AQ5-07, was screened for biosurfactant production ability using the multiple approaches of blood haemolysis, surface tension, emulsification index, oil spreading, drop collapse and “MATH” assay for cellular hydrophobicity. The growth kinetics of the bacterium containing different canola oil concentration was studied. The strain showed β-haemolysis on blood agar with a high emulsification index and low surface tension value of 91.5% and 25.14 mN/m, respectively. Of the models tested, the Haldane model provided the best description of the growth kinetics, although several models were similar in performance. Parameters obtained from the modelling were the maximum specific growth rate (qmax), concentration of substrate at the half maximum specific growth rate, Ks% (v/v) and the inhibition constant Ki% (v/v), with values of 0.142 h−1, 7.743% (v/v) and 0.399% (v/v), respectively. These biological coefficients are useful in predicting growth conditions for batch studies, and also relevant to “in field” bioremediation strategies where the concentration of oil might need to be diluted to non-toxic levels prior to remediation. Biosurfactants can also have application in enhanced oil recovery (EOR) under different environmental conditions. © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
MDPI AG
14203049
English
Article
All Open Access; Gold Open Access
author Ibrahim S.; Khalil K.A.; Zahri K.N.M.; Gomez-Fuentes C.; Convey P.; Zulkarnain A.; Sabri S.; Alias S.A.; González-Rocha G.; Ahmad S.A.
spellingShingle Ibrahim S.; Khalil K.A.; Zahri K.N.M.; Gomez-Fuentes C.; Convey P.; Zulkarnain A.; Sabri S.; Alias S.A.; González-Rocha G.; Ahmad S.A.
Biosurfactant production and growth kinetics studies of the waste canola oil-degrading bacterium rhodococcus erythropolis AQ5-07 from Antarctica
author_facet Ibrahim S.; Khalil K.A.; Zahri K.N.M.; Gomez-Fuentes C.; Convey P.; Zulkarnain A.; Sabri S.; Alias S.A.; González-Rocha G.; Ahmad S.A.
author_sort Ibrahim S.; Khalil K.A.; Zahri K.N.M.; Gomez-Fuentes C.; Convey P.; Zulkarnain A.; Sabri S.; Alias S.A.; González-Rocha G.; Ahmad S.A.
title Biosurfactant production and growth kinetics studies of the waste canola oil-degrading bacterium rhodococcus erythropolis AQ5-07 from Antarctica
title_short Biosurfactant production and growth kinetics studies of the waste canola oil-degrading bacterium rhodococcus erythropolis AQ5-07 from Antarctica
title_full Biosurfactant production and growth kinetics studies of the waste canola oil-degrading bacterium rhodococcus erythropolis AQ5-07 from Antarctica
title_fullStr Biosurfactant production and growth kinetics studies of the waste canola oil-degrading bacterium rhodococcus erythropolis AQ5-07 from Antarctica
title_full_unstemmed Biosurfactant production and growth kinetics studies of the waste canola oil-degrading bacterium rhodococcus erythropolis AQ5-07 from Antarctica
title_sort Biosurfactant production and growth kinetics studies of the waste canola oil-degrading bacterium rhodococcus erythropolis AQ5-07 from Antarctica
publishDate 2020
container_title Molecules
container_volume 25
container_issue 17
doi_str_mv 10.3390/molecules25173878
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85090176519&doi=10.3390%2fmolecules25173878&partnerID=40&md5=19b526998e53d800335e795a02d733e0
description With the progressive increase in human activities in the Antarctic region, the possibility of domestic oil spillage also increases. Developing means for the removal of oils, such as canola oil, from the environment and waste “grey” water using biological approaches is therefore desirable, since the thermal process of oil degradation is expensive and ineffective. Thus, in this study an indigenous cold-adapted Antarctic soil bacterium, Rhodococcus erythropolis strain AQ5-07, was screened for biosurfactant production ability using the multiple approaches of blood haemolysis, surface tension, emulsification index, oil spreading, drop collapse and “MATH” assay for cellular hydrophobicity. The growth kinetics of the bacterium containing different canola oil concentration was studied. The strain showed β-haemolysis on blood agar with a high emulsification index and low surface tension value of 91.5% and 25.14 mN/m, respectively. Of the models tested, the Haldane model provided the best description of the growth kinetics, although several models were similar in performance. Parameters obtained from the modelling were the maximum specific growth rate (qmax), concentration of substrate at the half maximum specific growth rate, Ks% (v/v) and the inhibition constant Ki% (v/v), with values of 0.142 h−1, 7.743% (v/v) and 0.399% (v/v), respectively. These biological coefficients are useful in predicting growth conditions for batch studies, and also relevant to “in field” bioremediation strategies where the concentration of oil might need to be diluted to non-toxic levels prior to remediation. Biosurfactants can also have application in enhanced oil recovery (EOR) under different environmental conditions. © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
publisher MDPI AG
issn 14203049
language English
format Article
accesstype All Open Access; Gold Open Access
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
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